Tag Archives: chickens

garden adventures for chickens

this past weekend was all about hanging out with our new chickens and working in the garden. we let the girls out of their run to explore the rest of their new home and they seemed to have a great time. they poked their beaks into almost all of the garden areas, but spent most their time around the hydrangea bushes and underneath the bunny hutch. they really loved scratching around the dried leaves under the bushes and in the big pile of hay and compost under the hutch. estelle made herself quite a nest in the hay and when she was tired of that spot, nedra took it over. they’re so silly – estelle mostly buried herself with only her tiny head visible above the nest but nedra sprawled around and squirmed her bottom on the ground to get a good dust bath.

while the girls were out and about, we did some work in and around their coop. we shoveled some of the garden soil around the bottom of the coop to fill in the gaps between the coop bottom and the ground. we cleaned out the run, added more soil to cover the chicken wire at the base of the run and then piled hay back on top of the soil so that chickens have something to scratch around (and poop) in. we set in a few large stones to create a path to the back of the coop and a place to stand and access it for cleaning and egg-gathering. we transplanted some hostas and ferns around the coop and the stones and bought some red cedar mulch to lay down around the plants and stones to pretty up the space. we haven’t laid the mulch down yet but it already looks much better now – more like the beginning of a garden area, rather than a muddy bare spot.

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we transplanted in some tomato and pepper seedlings too and gave the garden a good soaking. i mulched in the seedlings with some skirting wool that i picked up during my recent trip to juniper moon farm to keep the moisture in and the weeds out. i also put some chipped christmas tree mulch around the blueberry bushes and strawberry plants, too. there are still things we need to do in the garden (there always are) but yesterday was a good productive day. and the best part was having a beer on the patio and surveying our garden after all our hard work.

getting the ladies back in the coop after their adventure is a bit of a challenge. veronica actually strolled right into the run on her own, as soon as she heard farmer woob say that she was going to try to lure the girls in – she’s clearly the brains of the trio. we tried luring estelle and nedra with cabbage but they’re not that trusting of us yet. and they’re pretty difficult to sneak up on and catch – they escaped easily when we tried to corral them behind the blue hydrangea bush. but in the end, we more or less herded them towards the run entrance and, after one false start when the door wasn’t open enough and they scampered behind the run instead of in it, we managed to convince them that the safest spot to flee was into the run where we wanted them to be.

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introducing the newest members of chez farm – chickens!

last weekend, our dreams of chickens on chez farm finally came home to roost. (sorry, i just could not resist). we decided to go with the coop and chicken package provided by victory chicken co.
they bring the coop, the chickens, starter bags of food, hay, wood chips, all you need for basic chicken-husbandry – easy-peasy.

we did have to prepare the space where the coop would go.

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and here we are!

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that’s veronica in the run, there. she’s a barred rock hen, about eight months old and already laying lovely brown eggs for us. the other two aren’t visible (they’re inside the coop in this picture) and their names are estelle and nedra. they’re easter egger hens, who lay blue-green eggs. they’re a little more timid and haven’t quite got used to their new surroundings yet. and they’re very camera-shy.

in case you haven’t guessed, veronica, nedra and estelle are named after the ronettes. (oh come on, try and think of better names for chickens than the members of a motown girl group). all three of them are ridiculous and adorable and i’m completely in love with them already. and they’re great layers – we now have nine eggs from hens we’ve only had for six days (plus the one i ate this morning).

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see? shy.


introducing the newest members of chez farm – chickens!

last weekend, our dreams of chickens on chez farm finally came home to roost. (sorry, i just could not resist). we decided to go with the coop and chicken package provided by victory chicken co.
they bring the coop, the chickens, starter bags of food, hay, wood chips, all you need for basic chicken-husbandry – easy-peasy.

we did have to prepare the space where the coop would go.

20120428-183037.jpg

and here we are!

20120428-183106.jpg

that’s veronica in the run, there. she’s a barred rock hen, about eight months old and already laying lovely brown eggs for us. the other two aren’t visible (they’re inside the coop in this picture) and their names are estelle and nedra. they’re easter egger hens, who lay blue-green eggs. they’re a little more timid and haven’t quite got used to their new surroundings yet. and they’re very camera-shy.

in case you haven’t guessed, veronica, nedra and estelle are named after the ronettes. (oh come on, try and think of better names for chickens than the members of a motown girl group). all three of them are ridiculous and adorable and i’m completely in love with them already. and they’re great layers – we now have nine eggs from hens we’ve only had for six days (plus the one i ate this morning).

20120428-183128.jpg

see? shy.


After the Rain

Severe weather pounded through north Texas this afternoon, leaving a wake of destruction in many parts of town, and terrorizing thousands of people.  We, by God's grace, were spared.  No hail, no high winds, no damage.  Just a heavy, soaking rain.


And then it blew away.  It left behind some gorgeous cool breezes, bird song, and saturated colors.  Here is my evening, in pictures...




















I add my prayers to many others on behalf of the people who lost electricity, possessions and property in today's storms.

Chickens are ingrates!

I’ve mentioned here once or twice that we have too many chickens. When I say we have too many, what I really mean is that we have too many chickens to fit in our coop. At night, chickens need a spot to roost and our coop was just a little too crowded for all of our laying hens to roost with the amount of elbow room they desire.

As a result, about half of our chicken flock has taken to spending the night roosting on the fence around the little paddock. This drives me nuts because, 1. I think it looks sloppy to have chickens roosting all over the shop and 2. it results in a lot of chicken poop in places where I would prefer there be no chicken poop at all.

It was a problem that has been vexing me for ages and ages and I finally decided that something must be done about it. So a couple months ago, I visited a nearby shed store and ordered a 10×10 shed, custom painted to match our barn, to be delivered to the farm. It was a bit pricey (considering it was going to be fancy chicken house) but I couldn’t wait to get it to the farm and solve all my chicken problems.

 

After much anticipation it was delivered, and Zac built out the inside with stadium seating roosts and fancy nest boxes.

Then we did what you do with chickens when changing their address, namely we put them all in the coop and made them stay inside for three days and three nights. Of course, they had food and water and we even put in a fan to circulate the air for their comfort.

After three days in their new pad, we opened the door and let the chickens out, and patted ourselves on the back for meeting a problem head on and fixing it. YAY US!

Only, the problem wasn’t solved. Because that very evening, the chickens went right back to roosting on the fence around the little paddock. Huh.

Not a problem. We just waited until they fell asleep and snatched them off the fence and relocated them to their new digs. And we’ve repeated this procedure every night since. Stupid chickens.

On Saturday, we will try round two of chicken re-education camp, only this time we will be keeping them in their palatial coop for five days. I’ll report back on our progress.

In another, more successful campaign, we have figured out a way to keep from having to mow our lawn. In the past, we’ve let the sheep and goats out into the yard every now and then to munch on the grass, but  they were never very systematic about their approach to keeping the grass down. They more our less ran from here to there, nibbling as they went, but never enough to keep us from having to mow.

But even that level of lawn help is no longer an option, because Zac and Caroline have planted all kinds of berry bushes around the property, and we don’t want the tiny, tender plants to become a sheep’s hors d’oeruvres.

We’ve come up with a solution though, that solves both problems. Instead of turning the whole flock out into the yard, we have put together a team of landscapers- namely, the dairy goats. And instead of letting them flit around eating what they like, we put each of them on a 15 foot tie out stake in the areas where we need mowing.

It works like a charm! The goats are thrilled to get to eat the lush, green grass and clover that was previously on the other side of the fence.

Sam looks like she could give birth in the next 5 days or so.

Bertie looks even closer if it’s possible. Check out that full udder!

While his mama grazes, Cam the peanut plays on the rocks and entertains the ladies.

 

Two Magnificent Days in a Row

The chores took extra long to finish today, again, because I just couldn't soak up enough of the sweetness into my pores.  I can't express how rare and treasured these days are in Texas - bright, cool, dry, refreshing.  I will ache for this day, come August.


Lots of us are wondering what this warm winter will bode for the summer - will it be even hotter than last year?  Will the bugs be worse for lack of freezing temperatures?  Until I saw my redbud tree budding out today, I wasn't sure whether to believe that spring had really come for good.  The native trees know, so I trust them.  Conversely, never trust a Bradford pear - they are gullible and easily deceived into believing winter is over, and then getting frostbitten by a freak ice storm, and waking up dead.  They ain't from around here.


Tomatoes aren't native either, and need special handling.  Mine have grown a bit spindly indoors, just getting the sun through the windows so far.  Today, it seemed mild enough for them to play outside on the front porch as the sun lowered toward the horizon.  I think they liked it.


The woolie beasts are so anxious to get out of their winter coats--literally itching to be sheared.  Joseph looks like the Michelin Man of alpacas - I really cannot wait to see him out of his fleece.


Everybody is fluffed up and ready to move on to the naked portion of the fiber year.  Tomorrow, it is supposed to get up to nearly 80 degrees, and you really don't need an alpaca coat in that kind of weather.


The hens are digging this, though.  The days have lengthened, and the girls have ramped up their laying.  I think the sight of all this new green grass has all of us a bit rejuvenated.


The bugs are waking up and providing lots of food and entertainment for the flock.  We should also be seeing nice orange yolks in the eggs, with all this free protein and greenstuff adding to the hens' nutrition.


 The guineas are, well, guineas.  Loud and crazy, like always.  They're pretty faithful that way.


I spent too much of the day inside working on stuff that just had to be done.  But I'm going to regret every minute I didn't get to enjoy of this day outside in the fresh air.  Forgive the cliche, but, I wish I could have bottled it.


chicken dreams

chickens are also on the agenda this spring! adding laying hens to our food-growing, bee-keeping, angora-rabbit-raising setup will make this feel like a real urban farm. but because we’re still a pair of over-achieving yuppies with delusions of a mid-century modern design aesthetic (and because we have neighbors who can see into our backyard), we’re not content to throw together some scrap wood and chicken wire into some kind of ghetto coop.

you know, there are some fantastic coop designs out there, along with amazingly talented people who designed and built them. our favorite is this one that was profiled in dwell magazine. that bit of green you can see peeking up along the roof top? that there, is a green roof. on a chicken coop. made of reclaimed cedar siding, fer pete’s sake.

Modern Chicken Coop by Mitchell Snyder in Dwell Magazine

this one is pretty great too. i love the lanterns outside the front door.

stylish chicken coop from the art of doing stuff

but as enterprising as we are, we’re sort of overwhelmed by the prospect of designing and building a chicken coop that can live up to these models (also, that second one is way too big for the three chickens (max) we’re going to have). it’s not that we couldn’t do it if we put our minds to it, it’s really more that we’d maybe rather pay someone else to do it for us so we can skip straight to the enjoying-the-chickens-in-their-fancy-already-built-home part.

and THEN, i found out that there is a brooklyn company that provides all-in-one chicken services to aspiring new york city chicken-keepers – victory chicken co. i think we’re going to go with the rosie package: a simple and modern coop sized just right for the three young hens almost ready to start laying that they also provide, and a two-month supply of chicken feed, hay, and wood shavings to keep the girls fed, clean and happy. best part – they build and install the coop, so we really can skip straight to the aforementioned enjoying-our-new-chickens part.

we’re gonna get the teal version.

farm on!


chicken dreams

chickens are also on the agenda this spring! adding laying hens to our food-growing, bee-keeping, angora-rabbit-raising setup will make this feel like a real urban farm. but because we’re still a pair of over-achieving yuppies with delusions of a mid-century modern design aesthetic (and because we have neighbors who can see into our backyard), we’re not content to throw together some scrap wood and chicken wire into some kind of ghetto coop.

you know, there are some fantastic coop designs out there, along with amazingly talented people who designed and built them. our favorite is this one that was profiled in dwell magazine. that bit of green you can see peeking up along the roof top? that there, is a green roof. on a chicken coop. made of reclaimed cedar siding, fer pete’s sake.

Modern Chicken Coop by Mitchell Snyder in Dwell Magazine

this one is pretty great too. i love the lanterns outside the front door.

stylish chicken coop from the art of doing stuff

but as enterprising as we are, we’re sort of overwhelmed by the prospect of designing and building a chicken coop that can live up to these models (also, that second one is way too big for the three chickens (max) we’re going to have). it’s not that we couldn’t do it if we put our minds to it, it’s really more that we’d maybe rather pay someone else to do it for us so we can skip straight to the enjoying-the-chickens-in-their-fancy-already-built-home part.

and THEN, i found out that there is a brooklyn company that provides all-in-one chicken services to aspiring new york city chicken-keepers – victory chicken co. i think we’re going to go with the rosie package: a simple and modern coop sized just right for the three young hens almost ready to start laying that they also provide, and a two-month supply of chicken feed, hay, and wood shavings to keep the girls fed, clean and happy. best part – they build and install the coop, so we really can skip straight to the aforementioned enjoying-our-new-chickens part.

we’re gonna get the teal version.

farm on!


Learning to See

This is Home School Week at the farm, with three groups coming out to visit in as many days.  Today was Day Two, and the group who came out today was a joy to host.  With the sunshine on our faces and a nice breeze in our hair, we learned about sheep and guard dogs and chickens and alpacas. 


Our de facto Farm Ambassador, Vanni, graciously accepted all the love and hugs he could get through the fence.  I'd let him out, but I'm not sure he knows how big he is, and he might just knock down a few kids (and moms) in his exuberance.  He doesn't jump, but his tail has a whappy-waggly mind of its own.


Ruthie is much more dignified in the way she accepts the offerings of love and doggy admiration from her fans.  She's a high-powered kid magnet.


But these kids came with a special magnetism all their own.  The alpacas, who are usually good with being ogled through the fence, actually allowed themselves to be stroked by sweet little hands.  This is a first.  Levi and Boaz are the most tolerant, but even they usually stay just out of reach when a big group of people comes to call.


 It's wonderful, because Levi is about the softest alpaca in the herd.  He has the gentlest personality of all the alpacas.  I was glad that the kids got to feel alpaca fiber on the hoof like that.


We learned about wool - the shearing, skirting, washing, carding and spinning.  The kids asked amazingly astute questions, just as I expect of kids who get a lot of practice with self-directed learning and inquiry.

Tomorrow we'll host our third group of home schoolers, and I'm looking forward to another day of questions that keep me on my toes.  I'm really grateful for the farm to be a part of these kids' growing up and growing wise.

Farm Survey

It's been too long since our last walk around the farm together, so I snapped some shots of critters who would love some virtual scritches.

Judah and Tella vie for attention

Social grooming bonds this working pair

Tella is such a beauty.  A busy, mischievous beauty.

The ewes and lambs are shaggy and plump

Rachel is brave, behind the fence

Phineas eats and dozes on Shadrach's back

Shad and Mordechai get fresh water

Ms. Smokey shadows me on my rounds

Ruthie is always alert.  Except when she's sawing logs.

Boaz enjoys the sunshine

This weather is heavenly to the alpacas - cool mornings and sunny, mild afternoons

These Ameraucanas are trying to make a break for it.  Patience, girls.

Ice overnight will give way to spring-like temperatures by afternoon

How does our garden grow?  Our patience has been rewarded.  The seeds have germinated and new sprouts are coming up in the protected environment of the greenhouse.  This provides good wind protection, and a bit of temperature mediation.  Even though it's not airtight or heated, the cover makes a big difference for these cool weather veggies.  My next plan is to get some onion starts to fill up the vacant plot in the greenhouse.  I'm also starting some tomatoes indoors.

The spinach has sprouted in the greenhouse

Baby turnips

A row of young lettuce
I'm putting together the next farm newsletter, which will be chock-full of news about the very cool plans we have for 2012.  If you're not on our list, sign up via the link in the left margin.  I think you'll like how our calendar is shaping up.